chilterns country...chilterns country start / finish area of outstanding natural beauty station to...
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Chilterns Country
Start / Finish
AREA OF OUTSTANDING NATURAL BEAUTY
Station to Station Walk5.5 miles (8.5km)
Photographs: The Chilterns Conservation Board
CONSERVATION BOARD
Visitor Information
How to get to the start
Circular Walk6.5 miles (11km)
The walks described here are ideal for access by public
transport, either train or bus.
All of the walk options offer a delightful mixture of woodland
walks interspersed with panoramic views, giving a real
flavour of the Chilterns; one of England’s most wooded Areas
of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
Many of the woodlands are classified as ‘Ancient semi-
natural’ , reflecting their great age and their high wildlife
interest.
The walks are mainly on un-surfaced tracks which can get
muddy in wet weather. Stout footwear is recommended.
Refreshments are available on the walk at:
The Harte and Magpies, tel: 01494 726754.
Refreshments are also available in Beaconsfield and Seer
Green.
It is suggested that station to station walkers
should start at Seer Green & Jordans to take advantage of the
more frequent services from Beaconsfield at the end of their
walk.
There are some great value off peak fares when you travel
with friends and family including GroupSave where 3 or 4
travel for the price of 2. For train times and fares call Chiltern
Railways on 03456 005165 or
www.chilternrailways.co.uk
Bus service 305 links High Wycombe and
Uxbridge with Beaconsfield and Seer Green. For times call
Traveline 0870 608 2 608. www.traveline.org.uk
There is cycle parking at Seer Green & Jordans
and Beaconsfield railway stations.
There is car parking at railway stations at Seer
Green and at Beaconsfield.
By Train:
By bus:
By cycle:
Parking:
About the walk
Whichever length of walk you choose you will be rewarded
with the sort of woodland experience for which the Chilterns
are justifiably famed. The Chilterns AONB is about one-fifth
wooded and this route
gives a good
introduction to the
diversity of forest types
that make up this
defining landscape
feature. You will walk
through woodlands
which are so
biologically important
that they have been
selected as ‘Sites of
Special Scientific
Interest’ and relatively
new plantations of
mixed conifers and
broadleaved trees.
Between the woods are paths and quiet lanes offering
extensive views over the rolling Chilterns landscape.
There are only two main road crossings, however these are
across the busy A355 Beaconsfield to Amersham road and
great care must be taken.
Set yourself challenges, but start gently and work up*.
Spend at least two sessions of 15 minutes each walking
briskly enough to raise your heartbeat, get warm and breathe
harder.
This walk lets you select longer walks as your fitness levels
increase.
*Consult your GP if you have not exercised recently or have a
known medical condition.
Walking gets you fit and keeps you healthy!!
Seer Greenof French origin and meaning a dry place. In the manorial rolls of 1223 it was known as La Sere and, along with nearby Jordans, was just a hamlet in the parish of Chalfont St. Giles.
A mile from Seer Green (just off the map) lies the village of
Jordans which contains a small quaker meeting house, an
adjacent cemetery and an old timbered barn. Jordans
became a centre in England for the Religious Society of
Friends, commonly known as Quakers or Friends, founded in
England during the 17th century. The
Meeting House grounds hold the grave
of William Penn, the founder of the
State of Pennsylvania. Originally a
‘province’, Pennsylvania was granted to
William Penn by King Charles II in
settlement of a large loan made to the
king by Penn’s father. The province
remained in the Penn family ownership
until the American Revolution.
William Penn spent only a few years in America but his
legacy was such that as recently as 1984 President Reagan
granted William and his wife, Hannah, honorary citizenship.
Next to the Quaker Meeting House is the Mayflower Barn.
This barn was reputedly built with timbers from the ship, the
Mayflower, which in 1620 took the Pilgrim Fathers to found
the first colony in New England. The barn is in private
ownership, but the Quaker Meeting House is open to visitors
(check opening times
www.jordansquakercentre.org)
and the burial grounds and garden
surrounding the building are open
to visitors all year round.
Coleshill Windmill at Coleshill
can be spotted on the horizon
from much of the northern part of
the walk. The mill has now been
converted but was built in 1856
for grinding cereals. Windmills
were late-comers to the Chilterns,
is a composite name, the element ‘Seer’ being
the area having firstly relied upon its many water-powered
mills, e.g. along the Chess and the Misbourne. Windmill
technology rapidly spread in dry areas so that the late
mediaeval skyline would have been marked by as many mills’
sails as church spires.
Bekonscot Model Village village created in 1829 anf featuring an entire miniature
kingdom struck firmly in an idyllic 1930s time warp. there are
six little villages in a miniature landscape of farms and fields,
castles and churches, woods, lakes and rolling hills. Each
village is linked by one of Britain’s largest public outdoor
model railways. The Model Village is open to the public,
further information on Tel 01494672919
Hodgemoor WoodsThe central area of this 100 hectare (250 acre) woodland
dates back to the 13th and 14th centuries. Surrounding this
ancient core, secondary semi-natural woodland of the 18th,
19th and 20th century has developed. The wide range of soil
types, its mixed history and the low intensity of past
management has resulted in Hodgemoor having an extremely
wide variety of woodland trees and shrubs. These include
whitebeam, wild service tree, field maple, wych elm, aspen,
crab apple and yew. This now unusual combination is
thought to have once been typical of the Chiltern woodlands
before the widespread planting of beech.
Hodgemoor is also rich in its fungi, flora, and butterflies.
Breeding birds include such woodland species as woodcock,
hawfinch, green and great spotted woodpeckers.
is the world’s oldest model
www.bekonscot.com
Seer Green & Beaconsfield Walk
Features of Interest:
Please be considerate in the countryside:Keep to public rights of way, and leave farm gates
as you find them.
Please keep dogs under close control.
This is one of a series of walks through the Chilterns Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. It mainly follows rights of way - most of which are waymarked as follows:
Footpaths (walkers only)
Bridleways (horseriders, cyclists and walkers)
Byways (open to all traffic)
Restricted Byways (horseriders, cyclists, walkers and non-mechanically propelled vehicles)
In woodland, paths are also marked by the Chiltern Societywith painted arrows on soime trees.
If you have enjoyed this walk, there are many other wonderful
walks in the Chilterns:
Visit www.chilternsaonb.org or call 01844 355500 for
other Chiltern Country walks from railway stations.
Visit www.chilternsociety.org.uk or call 01494 771250 for
information on the Chiltern Society’s walk programme, to
obtain Chiltern Society footpath maps or to join the Society.
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The Chiltern Hills were designated as an Area of Outstanding
Natural Beauty (AONB) in 1965. This is in recognition that
the Chiltern countryside is amongst the finest in England and
Wales. The Chilterns Conservation Board is the body charged
with protecting the AONB. www.chilternsaonb.org
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o
Seer Green & Jordans Station toBeaconsfield Station
This leaflet has been produced by
© Chilterns Conservation Board, 2017,
with support of :
Distance:5.5miles (8.5km) Allow 3 hours.
Access Information: The walk is mainly on un-made paths with soft surfaces. It includes a few stiles before reaching Hodgemoor Woods.
The route is undulating. The bridleway through Blue Close Wood can get very muddy in winter.
Route Description:
At Seer Green and Jordans Station, take the gated path across the car park from the station building. Follow the path down to Longbottom Lane and cross the road to take the footpath opposite.
Follow the path and cross Long Grove to reach School Lane after 350m. Follow School Lane left, past the village school and playground towards the church. Pass to the left of the church, past the Three Horseshoes pub (the Jolly Cricketers is on the opposite side of the Church) and continue past the village shops along Orchard Road.
About 150m from the church, turn right up a footpath between houses, crossing Howard Road and Howard Crescent to emerge into a paddock. Cross the paddock diagonally and turn right on reaching a path junction. Follow this path through more paddocks to eventually emerge into Rawlings Lane.
Turn left and follow Rawlings Lane to the junction with Bottom Lane where you turn right to enter Hodgemoor Woods to then follow the waymarked bridleway to your left.
Follow the marked paths towards the north-west corner of the wood. At the point where the marked bridleway turns sharply right, continue straight ahead on an unmarked path to soon reach the footpath junction with the Amersham Road (A355).
Take great care on road crossings.
Take care crossing this road - Fast traffic!
Follow Magpie Lane for a short distance, taking the track on your left to Ongar Hill Farm.
At the Farm, cross onto the footpath and then turn almost immediately left onto the waymarked bridleway and follow it for 1km to Wood Cottage.
Turn right and follow the path west into Great Beard's Wood.
After about 700m, take the footpath left, heading south, and follow this through to Beaconsfield. At the end of the footpath cross Ledborough Lane (with care) and continue along Wilton Road, before turning right into Grenfell Road, second left into St Michael's Green, right into Caledon Close and following the footpath on the left down slope to the station
Distance: 6.5 miles (11km) Allow 3.5 hours.
Route Description:
To follow a circular walk from Seer Green & Jordans;
Follow the Station to Station route through to Great Beard’s Wood and pick up the path heading south as before.
After about 600m take the footpath left, heading eastwards through Brown's Wood and across the adjoining fields.
Continue to follow this path to the corner of the field where you bear left and then right on to the driveway leading to South Lodge and the Amersham Road.
Cross diagonally to the right.
Follow the path into Birchen Spring and continue to head generally easterly through to Blue Close Wood.
Turn right onto the bridleway back to Bottom Lane.Turn right again and follow down to Longbottom Lane where you turn left and follow for 550m to reach the path on the right up to Seer Green station
Take care - Fast traffic!
Station to Station Walk
Circular Walk
The Countryside Code
lBe safe - plan ahead and follow any signs
lLeave gates and property as you find them
lProtect plants and animals, and take your litter home
lKeep dogs under close control
lConsider other people.
Respect Protect Enjoy
Beaconsfield
Great Beard’s Wood
Brown’s Wood
Hodgemoor Woods
Key
Public House
Railway Station
A355 to Amersham
Station to Station Walk
Circular Link
Model Village
Wood Cottage
Ongar Hill Farm
A355to M40
Blue Close Wood
Seer Green
Bucks, Herts or Metro-land?Our walk takes us into what was once an outlier of
Hertfordshire and not part of Buckinghamshire at all. The
parish of Coleshill was not absorbed into Bucks until 1844.
Such oddities have gradually been weeded out by successive
boundary reviews and local government re-organisations.
However, this quirk of history is still recorded in local place
names and ‘Hertfordshire House’ can be seen on the
Ordnance Survey maps just west of our route.
Much of our walk passes through areas marketed as ‘Metro-
land’ by the Metropolitan Railway. A century ago the
railway had started its Country Walks books, suggesting
walks in the Chilterns for visitors from London. A tradition
which this leaflet is pleased to continue.
But the Metropolitan Railway also built houses, developing
land it had bought for the construction of the line. Housing
following the railways created the social phenomenon of
suburbia, permanently changing many small towns.
Beaconsfield was a relative backwater for many years
following the development of railways and decline of the old
coaching route. But in 1906 Beaconsfield got its own station
and a housing boom ensued, creating the New Town at the
end of our walk.
The Harte and Magpies
BottomWood
BirchenSpring
SouthLodge
AMERSHAMROAD
BOTTOMLANE
LONGBOTTOMLANE
0 500m 1km
0 0.5mile
North